Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is increasingly recognised as a threat to human, animal and environmental health. In an effort to counter this threat, several intervention plans have been proposed and implemented by states and organisations such as the WHO. A One Health policy approach, which targets multiple domains (healthcare, animal husbandry and the environment), has been identified as useful for curbing AMR. Johnson and Matlock have recently argued that One Health policies in the AMR context require special ethical justification because of the so-called least restrictive alternative principle. This article analyses and rejects two assumptions that this argument relies on. The first assumption is that One Health policies are generally more restrictive than their alternatives because they target more domains and impact more people. The second assumption is that the least restrictive alternative principle has a special normative importance in that it establishes a systematic presumption in favour of the least restrictive policy options. Once these assumptions are rejected, the use of One Health policies on AMR can be justified more easily than Johnson and Matlock argue.
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机译:抗微生物药物耐药性 (AMR) 越来越被认为是对人类、动物和环境健康的威胁。为了应对这一威胁,各州和世界卫生组织等组织已经提出并实施了多项干预计划。针对多个领域(医疗保健、畜牧业和环境)的“同一个健康”政策方法已被确定为有助于遏制 AMR。Johnson 和 Matlock 最近认为,由于 AMR 背景下的 One Health 政策需要特殊的道德理由,因为所谓的限制最少的替代原则。本文分析并驳斥了该论点所依赖的两个假设。第一个假设是 One Health 策略通常比其替代方案更具限制性,因为它们针对更多领域并影响更多人。第二个假设是,限制最少的替代原则具有特殊的规范意义,因为它建立了一个支持限制最少的政策选项的系统性假设。一旦这些假设被否定,那么在 AMR 上使用 One Health 政策就比 Johnson 和 Matlock 争论的更容易证明其合理性。
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